Hello friends! Evan Greer here. This is where I'll be posting my monthly Friends Not Fans Newsletter as well as other updates occasionally. Scroll down to find latest news about my music, tour schedule, new releases, fun stories from the road, cute pictures of my family, and most importantly news and updates about what's going on in the world. Got an event or campaign you want me to promote here? Contact me!

1) Broken guitar! Please donate!My little Martin has always taken a beating. It's been teargassed, dropped, hit with rocks, flown, bussed, biked, and carried thousands of miles, and played in a somewhat reckless manner for about 8 years now. I'm sad to announce that it seems to have finally met it's end. In a baby-related sleep deprived haze I accidentally slammed it into a door and the good people at the Music Emporium tell me the repairs aren't worth it for what's left of the guitar.

Times are super tight right now but I need a guitar to stay on the road touring, singing, and supporting the growing rebellion!

I'm starting an emergency NEW GUITAR fund! Please donate if you can using PayPal!!!

-Donate more than $20 and I'll send you a signed CD and 2 patches.

-Donate more than $50 and you'll get a signed CD, 2 patches, a signed poster, and a burned CD with a bunch of rare unreleased material, radio interviews, videos, and more!

-Donate $200 or more and you'll get all the above PLUS i'll write a song about you and send you an mp3 of it!

-Donate $500 and you get a private concert in your home at a date we work out.

-Donate $1000 and i'll name the guitar after you! ;-)

If you know of any good guitars out there, let me know!!!

2) Video, Photos, Stories from Great West Tour w/ ANNE FEENEY!No excuses, but the main reason this newsletter is so late is that I've been on tour for the past few weeks with the legendary and marvelous Anne Feeney along with Erin and Saoirse. We flew into Minneapolis and made our way out to Spokane, WA and back via North Dakota, South Dakota, Wyoming, Montana, and Idaho. A beautiful drive with simply the best company.

I took a lot of video on the tour using my phone and pieced together a little 10 minute video of some of our adventures and concerts. Check it out on my YouTube Channel and embedded below:

Highlights of the tour included:

A wonderful night at the Empire Arts Center in Grand Forks, ND to celebrate the 100th Anniversary of the North Dakota AFL-CIO.

saoirse's first picket line! Anne and I went several times to sing for locked out workers at American Crystal Sugar. There are over 1300 workers locked out because the company made a take it or leave it contract offer with huge cuts to worker safety, wages, and more. The real culprit here is Industrial Agriculture. American Crystal Sugar is technically a farmer owned co-operative. Sounds good, right? There used to be many many small farms involved and they were the friends and neighbors of the workers so the relationship was good. Now that big aggribusiness has bought up all the small beat farms and industrialized production, there's just a few huge farms (who's owners live far away) who are calling the shots at the sugar plant. SHAME on these profiteers. Workers in! Scabs out!

Support these locked out workers by signing their petition and donating online: www.bctgm.org

Mike Boysza, a retired UBC Carpenter, labor activist, and Habitat for Humanity builder took us on a fabulous tour of Butte, MT. We learned a lot about what capitalist interests have done to this old mining town where a few robber barons managed to extract millions of dollars in copper and silver at the expense of hundreds of immigrant workers lives and the local environment. Pictured above is the Berkeley Pit, a giant toxic lake created by a massive strip-mine operated by the Anaconda Company. It is the largest Superfund Site in the world.Our tour culminated at the grave of Frank Little, an IWW Union Organizer who was lynched by pinkerton in 1912 during a massive strike against the Anaconda (mining) Company. Mike was instrumental in restoring Frank Little's grave and now people who visit leave small tokens of solidarity and appreciation for a man who gave his life fighting for industrial unionism and justice. I thought Saoirse might want to show his appreciation so I handed him one of his pacifiers. "This is the grave of a freedom fighter," I told him, "A freedom fighter and a union man."Without any further provocation Saoirse threw his pacificer onto Franks tomb and happily left it there along with Anne and my guitar picks, many union pins, flowers, baseball cards, and other small gifts from comrades.

Other tour Highlights:

Badlands National Park in South Dakota

Fun little punk show in South Dakota. Check out Anne's punk rock side in this video.

We got the opportunity to do a few gigs with author Bill Adler on his book tour for "The Man Who Never Died," a new book that solves the murder mystery in the case of IWW hero Joe Hill. We had a wonderful time with Bill, his partner Robin, and their son Zeke. Amazing folks!

The end of the tour couldn't have been more exhilerating! We flew back to Pittsburgh for Anne to get her brain scanned (for those who don't know she has been fighting lung and brain cancer.) Her scan came back completely clean and the doctors used the word "remission" for the first time since this whole thing started! YAY! I'm so happy i can hardly type.

Stay tuned to www.annefeeney.com for updates and be sure to go buy some of Anne's CDs to support her. Because she is on social security she can't technically work, but she can take in income from CD sales. The holidays are coming up! What better gift to give than inspiring and revolutionary music? Support her: www.annefeeney.com

3) Occupation and LiberationIt seems like the #occupy movement is all we talk about these days! It's undeniable that there is an exciting energy in the air that hasn't been there for a few years. I go back and forth between feeling optimistic and excited and wanting to caution myself and others to make sure we keep this grassroots movement on a track that will lead to real change and counter injustice at its root.

I am excited about the revolutionary potential of so many people mobilizing and working horizontally. I've been trying to stop at as many of these protests / occupations as I can during my travels. I was at Wall Street with spiritchild the night after the occupation started and have made it back there a few times since. Anne Feeney and I played to a street corner full of folks at Occupy Spokane in Washington State, and at the Freedom Plaza Occupation in DC at the end of their tour, and I've visited Occupy Cleveland and Pittsburgh as well.

I'm honored and stoked to support this movement with music. I'm troubled, though, by the rhetoric of "the 99%" because I think it lets too many people off the hook. It paints a picture as if we are all in the same boat, as if the millionaire who just didn't make the cut to be in the 1% is a true friend and comrade to the dishwasher who got laid off last year. It also doesn't include an analysis of other forms of oppression like racism, ablesim, gender oppression, etc. Reports abound of blatant racism, sexism, and other forms of oppression being visible and accepted at these Occupy Events. It's also important to remember that the entire "United States" is occupied indigenous territory. We must keep this history of colonization, patriarchy, racism, and capitalism in mind and ensure that our movements will address these problems at their root. Non-hierarchical organizing is a great start, but we need to address our internalized oppression as well, not to mention our fear of fighting back.

I'm all for unity, and I think that one of the most exciting aspects of these protests is the shear number of new people who have gotten involved. I just hope we can use this as a spark to ignite a real revolution. The arrests of over 125 people in Boston made it clear: the government can shut these protests down whenever they want. They are allowing them to continue so long as they don't truly interrupt the workings of capitalism and profit, but as soon as we push the envelope we have to be ready to defend ourselves if we're ever going to win this fight.

where were the riots?that's all i could thinkwhen they murdered troy davisat 11:38where was the ragewhen the president saidit was none of his businessanother black man deadat the hands of a systemso soaked in bloodfrom the red white man's bluesto the pinkerton thugswhich side are you on?it's more than rich and poorthe top 1% may have started this warbut the roots of oppressiongo deeper than thatwe're back to the rootsand we're taking it back

100 years agoon that very same landa racist lynch mobkilled another black manhe hung from a treewhere the death row prison standshis name was henry ethridgehenry ethridge had a planhe said african people rise up and returnblacks back to africahenry ethridge yearnedthe plantation ownerssaw black men organizedfeared losing cheap laboron which they reliedhenry ethridge had a planso henry ethridge died

we're taking it backto the black packed slave shipsand the broken treatiesto the nina the pinta and the santa mariedecolonize wall streetset palestine freedon't be surprised if the Fedscome for mecuz what i'm bout to tell youthey don't want you to hearthe only thing holding us back is our feartil we're ready to fightyou can camp all nightrally all day in the cold sunlighthold candlelight vigilsand make your demandsbut we won't see peacewithout a line in the sanda line we can singand one we can defend

Please stay tuned to www.freetarek.com to learn how YOU can support political prisoner Tarek Mehanna. Tarek's trial has just begun and we need to let the FBI and U.S. Attorney know that the WHOLE WORLD IS WATCHING and we will not allow them to continue persecuting Muslims, arabs, and other people of color and marginalized people around the world.